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Yes, the drive can be plugged into the SATA port on the motherboard. Depending on the motherboard, this drive could transfer up to 6 GB/s.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.When they are saying 6144 they refer to Megabits per second which is the same to 6Gb/s (six Gigabits per second) do not get confuse MegaBytes (MB) Megabits (Mb) or GigaBytes (GB) and Gigabits (Gb) because they are totally different. 1 bit is the smallest unit in computers 1 Byte is 8 bits. So if you make numbers the max data transfer you can get using the SATA port 6Gb/s is 550MB/s and that is using an SSD. But in the real world probably its slower.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes it is. Works great as a boot drive.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.NO, that is a typo error they have refused to fix. Perhaps what they meant is 614.4 MB/second, Or 6144-Megabits (Mb) which equals to 768MB. Either way They both are misleading information. In reality The Max this drive can read is 517MB per second and write 356MB/second depending on your system (At peak speed, not constant speed). Even if the drive was faster, the Sata interface is limited to 6.0 Gb/s which is about 750 MB/s Maximum. Again this is only theoretical speed which could only be achieved if you were using the fastest processor, Memory, motherboard, SATA interface, etc. I hope it helps.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It is a typo SATA only offers 6gb/s = which is 300MB/s - gb = gigabit & MB = MegaBytes so no it is not going read or right 6144 megabytes per second.
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